View clinical trials related to Dengue.
Filter by:Infection with dengue viruses is the leading cause of hospitalization and death in children in many tropical Asian countries, and the development of a dengue vaccine is a top health priority. This study will evaluate the ability of a single dose of a trivalent dengue vaccine to protect against infection with an attenuated candidate DENV-2 vaccine, administered 6 months after the trivalent dengue vaccine.
The purpose of this study is to assess the post-vaccination neutralizing antibody response against each dengue serotype by vaccine group.
This study is being conducted to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity and antibody persistence of the candidate dengue vaccine.
This is a randomized, multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase III study that will evaluate efficacy and safety of a live attenuated, tetravalent, lyophilized dengue vaccine produced by Butantan Institute. The study will be carried out in multiple sites in Brazil. The study will be community-based in select urban areas where there's dengue transmission. Study's intervention will be a single dose of the tetravalent dengue vaccine or placebo in a ratio 2:1. For efficacy analysis will be considered all dengue cases occurring after 28 days post-vaccination in the entire population of 16944 participants. For safety analysis participants will be divided in three age groups: 18 to 59 ys, 7-17 ys and 2 to 6 ys. In each of these age groups there will be a minimum of 4992 participants. The age groups of 18 to 59 ys and 7 to 17 ys will start first. Once safety data for the first 21 days after vaccination is analysed for 450 participants in 7-to17-ys age group, the following group, of 2 to 6 ys, will start. The study's hypothesis is that the vaccine under investigation and produced by Butantan Institute is safe and provides protection against dengue symptomatic disease of 80% or more with a lower bound of the 95% confidence interval of 25%. This way, the expected number of dengue cases virologically confirmed is 24 or more which will provide a response in terms of vaccine efficacy. All participants will be followed up for five years to verify dengue incidence, regardless severity.
Dengue viruses infect millions of people throughout the tropics and subtropics each year. The development of a dengue vaccine is an important health priority. This study will evaluate the immunologic and clinical response to two dengue vaccines, given 9 months apart, in healthy adults with no history of previous flavivirus infection.
To evaluate the effectiveness of candidate dengue vaccine formulations, it is prudent to develop an appropriate challenge model. To this end, this first-in-human study will examine the safety and effectiveness of the Dengue 1 Live Virus Human Challenge (DENV-1-LVHC) product and assess the ability of this virus strain to elicit an uncomplicated dengue-like illness.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety of and immune response to two doses of a dengue vaccine (TV003) given 6 months apart to healthy adults, adolescents, and children in Thailand.
Dengue viruses are widespread in most tropical and subtropical regions of the world. This study will evaluate the safety and protective efficacy of a dengue vaccine (called TV005) against viremia and rash induced by a DENV-2 vaccine virus (called rDEN2∆30-7169) in healthy adults.
The rationale for a Treatment Use Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) of INTERCEPT PCs is to address current gaps in platelet transfusion safety in selected geographic regions. The objective is to provide access to INTERCEPT PCs for patients who might be at risk of transfusion-transmitted infection (TTI) due to Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) and Dengue virus (DENV) in regions in which a substantial proportion of the population has been infected or is at risk of infection by these pathogens (Petersen 2014); and the risk of asymptomatic infection among qualified blood donors is recognized (Stramer 2012, Adda 2014). The study is designed as a prospective, open label, multi-center, observational study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of INTERCEPT platelet components.
The purpose of this study is to assess the humoral immune responses to three different dose schedules of Takeda's Tetravalent Dengue Vaccine Candidate (TDV) administered subcutaneously in healthy participants between 2 and <18 years of age living in dengue endemic countries.